This project aims to identify the molecular mechanisms of postnatal growth and differentiation of the intervertebral disc (IVD), and how these mechanisms are down-regulated, leading to age-related changes in the IVD. Each IVD consists of a central semi-liquid nucleus pulposus (NP), surrounded by a multi-layered annulus fibrosus (AF), and connected to the bodies of the adjacent vertebral bodies by cartilagenous end plates (EP). Together, these components form a strong joint that resists both tension and compression forces between vertebrae. Degenerative disc disease (DDD) is a major cause of lower back pain, and other neurological symptoms leading to a decreased quality of life. DDD is extremely common, affecting as many as one in seven people. The treatment costs are high, and often include surgical intervention. However, treatment is essentially palliative, since it treats the effects of disc degeneration rather than the causes. The long-term goal of this project is to identify potential biological approaches to therapy, using the same pathways by which the IVD normally grows and differentiates. We have developed the mouse lumbar IVD as a model, and preliminary data shows that it can be used to identify the signaling pathways in the IVD that control postnatal growth and differentiation. We have found that during postnatal growth, the NP acts as a signaling center that controls both growth and differentiation. NP cells express SHH, and blockade of Shh signaling both in vitro and in vivo shows that it is essential for cell proliferation and differentiation of the IVD. NP cells also express several Wnt ligands, which are required to maintain Shh signaling in the IVD. Both these signaling pathways, and the downstream targets of Shh signaling, are down-regulated by the end of the growth period. However, Shh signaling, and the expression of differentiation markers, can be re-activated after the growth period by signals present in fetal bovine serum, or by Wnt agonists, showing that down-regulation of growth and differentiation is not irreversible, and offers potential future targets for therapy.
Aim 1 of the project tests the hypothesis that the duration of the postnatal growth period is determined by active Wnt signaling.
Aim 2 tests the hypothesis that a feedback loop between Wnt and Shh signaling is established by Wnt inhibitors expressed downstream of Shh signaling.
Aim 3 tests the hypothesis that circulating signals control the synchronous growth of all the IVDs by acting on Wnt/Shh signaling loop in the NP. The data from this project will provide the necessary information to explore further the nature of aging of the IVD, the basis of possible biological therapies for disc injury or degeneration, and novel scientific insights into te way growth and differentiation of the IVDs are controlled during postnatal growth.
The effects of intervertebral disc degeneration are huge medical and financial burdens, and most current treatments are only partially effective in controlling them. Understanding the molecular and cellular changes that control growth and differentiation of the IVD, and its timing, will lead to development of potential cellular therapie for regeneration of the disc, using the mechanisms by which it normally forms. The current study aims to fill this gap in the knowledge by determining the roles of local and systemic signals in controlling IVD growth and differentiation, and how these signals can be manipulated to reverse the loss of IVD growth and differentiation that occurs with age.
Bonavita, Raffaella; Vincent, Kathleen; Pinelli, Robert et al. (2018) Formation of the sacrum requires down-regulation of sonic hedgehog signaling in the sacral intervertebral discs. Biol Open 7: |
Carbone, Andrew; Carballo, Camila; Ma, Richard et al. (2016) Indian hedgehog signaling and the role of graft tension in tendon-to-bone healing: Evaluation in a rat ACL reconstruction model. J Orthop Res 34:641-9 |
Winkler, Tamara; Mahoney, Eric J; Sinner, Debora et al. (2014) Wnt signaling activates Shh signaling in early postnatal intervertebral discs, and re-activates Shh signaling in old discs in the mouse. PLoS One 9:e98444 |